14.7.17

She found strangers living in her house. Now she can't get them out.

Officers stand outside the home in Marietta, Ga.(Photo: WXIA/USA TODAY)

MARIETTA, Ga. – What if you came home and someone else was living in your house? That’s what happened to Dena Everman. And she can’t get them out.

But the dwellers say there are two sides to every story.

“I’m
extremely frustrated right that someone that has no legal right to be
in my home is staying in my home and I’m the one that has to prove that
they don’t belong there,” Everman said.

After 11 years of living in the house on Condor Drive in this city
northwest of Atlanta, Everman was in the process of selling her home.
She was supposed to close the sale on June 26. But the day before,
Everman walked into a surprise.

“I went by the home
on June 25 to say, ‘goodbye,’ to my home. When I drove up, there was a
different car in the driveway and it looked like somebody was in my
home.”

Dena Everman said strangers moved into her home in Marietta, Ga., without her permission. (Photo: WXIA/USA TODAY)

She had no idea who they were. She never gave them permission to be in there—but there they were.

The new residents were Tamera Pritchett, her fiancé and two children.

And it was a pretty big shock to her as well.

“Next thing we know, we’re being thrown out at 11:30 at night with two children,” Pritchett said.

Everman
said the way she sees it, someone broke into her home and were living
there without her permission. But, Pritchett said, it’s not so cut and
dry.

“It’s just embarrassing to have to go through
this,” Pritchett, who said she found the property listed for rent on
Craigslist, said.

But after signing e-documents and
wiring money to someone, whom they believed to be the owner, they
received keys to the home, and moved in.

A Georgia homeowner was selling her home and visited the house to find a family living in it. The renter said she found the property for rent on Craigslist. USA TODAY
“We’re not squatters. We have documents. We have keys,” said the mother of two.

“We’re not squatters. We have documents. We have keys,” said Tamera Pritchett. (Photo: WXIA-TV/USA TODAY)

Everman, however, isn’t budging.

“I own this home and I did not give these people permission to be in there. They have a false document.”

Cobb
County Police are investigating the situation. In fact, officers have
responded to the home multiple times since June 25, but haven't been
able to kick Pritchett's family out of the house.

“At
this point, I’m the legal owner of the property and I shouldn’t have to
expend this energy to get someone out that I did not give permission to
be in my home,” Everman said. “The police officers… decided it wasn’t
breaking-and-entering at that point even though there was a broken
window and changed locks and I had the deeds to my home and proof that
it was my home.”

All that Pritchett said she wants is time to move.

“At
the end of the day, yes, we got scammed. We understand that. We
understand this is your home. But why can’t we be adults and try to
figure this out and go after this person that scammed us and is
obviously out here scamming your name and your home,” she said defending
herself against claims that she is a squatter.

Under
Georgia law, “squatters have the right to take possession of this
property if they occupy it without permission for a specific period of
time.”

According to Pritchett, the scammer, whom
she paid $3,000 to, told her that he is in Garland, Texas, and owned the
house with Everman. Pritchett said that she and her family had been in
the house for two weeks when Everman showed up.

“They
tried to unlawfully throw us out by legally evicting us,” Pritchett
said, who went on to say that Everman knew about the scam and still sold
her house.

“I hope this shows everyone that this
can happen to anybody,” Pritchett cautioned. “I’m hoping this shows
people that you can’t trust everything over the Internet.”

Currently,
both sides are working with their attorneys to figure out next steps.
And while the Pritchett family said they will move out—it’s not fast
enough for Everman.

And the family who did purchase
the home from Everman can’t move in, have their belongings in storage
and have to stay with friends and family because they are “homeless.”

The fight to get the family out has been going on for two weeks and counting.

“I’ve
dealt with people harassing me. Threatening me and my family like we’re
not the victim. At the end of the day, both sides were victimized by
the situation,” Pritchett said.